About AI Editor
AI Editor reads your draft and returns a corrected, polished version — fixing grammar, punctuation, awkward phrasing, and weak transitions — while preserving your voice and intent. Writers use it as a first editing pass before sending to a human editor; ESL writers use it as a real-time language coach.
Who this tool is for
- Writers wanting a copy-edit pass before submitting to clients or editors
- ESL writers who want their English polished without losing their voice
- Bloggers running solo who do not have an editor on the team
- Students proofreading essays and theses before submission
- Anyone whose email or report needs to read more professionally
Real use cases
- Edit a 2,000-word blog post draft for grammar, flow, and stronger transitions
- Polish a translated email so it reads natively without changing the message
- Proofread a thesis chapter for typos, comma errors, and inconsistent terminology
- Tighten a client deliverable by 15% without dropping any substantive content
- Edit a cover letter for a job application to sound confident, not desperate
How to use AI Editor
- Paste your draft in the source field — works well up to 2,000 words at a time
- Pick edit intensity: Light (fix only errors), Medium (improve flow), Heavy (restructure where needed)
- Specify the register: Academic, Business, Casual, Creative, Technical
- Optionally mark sections to leave alone ("do not touch the quoted block in section 3")
- Generate; compare side by side to accept or reject changes
Tips for better results
- Always do a final pass yourself — the model is great at grammar but can miss intent, irony, or in-jokes that should stay "wrong"
- For consistency on a long piece, edit the whole document together rather than chapter by chapter; the model can match its own style across sections
- Ask for a "tracked-changes-style summary at the end" so you can see what changed without comparing line by line
Frequently asked questions
Will it change my voice?
Light edits should preserve voice almost entirely. Heavy edits may flatten it. If your voice matters (personal essay, brand content), paste a sample of your unedited writing and say "preserve this voice."
How is this different from Grammarly?
Grammarly flags issues for you to accept one at a time, integrated in your browser/Word. AI Editor returns a fully corrected version in one pass. Use both — Grammarly while drafting, AI Editor as a final pass.
Will it catch every error?
Most, not all. It catches surface grammar reliably; nuance errors (subject-verb agreement in complex sentences, comma splices in long sentences) sometimes slip. Read the final version once yourself.
Can it edit fiction without flattening dialogue?
Yes — say "preserve dialogue voice and dialect choices, edit only narration." Otherwise it may "correct" character voice that was intentionally non-standard.